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tv   KPIX 5 News at 6pm  CBS  September 4, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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t-shirts, souvenirs, knickknacks, inpensive foreign-made, crammed, and twice customers complained. the customers complained it was so crowded, there could have been a fire hazard. they complained to the fire department. twice the store cleaned things up before they could get cited. smoke came out of this building so much that you could see it from the east bay. it was so thick, four people, two firefighters and two neighbors, were taken to the hospital with smoke inhalation. >> i just saw huge smoke when i walk into the mission campus building. >> it was really bad, man. it was like i was having headaches and dizzy, my eyes are burning so bad. i had to go in the back and i could see the lights went off right now, uhm, it was getting worse, i guess.
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had to leave. >> let's go. >> reporter: it was very chaotic. we were doing the interview, we were told they had to leave -- they evacuated one side of the block between 23rd and 22nd on mission. all those stores are closed. they contained most of the damage to that one building. it was called big house. there was some damage to a building next door. it was so bad at one time firefighters pulled out because they feared that the roof could collapse. they pulled out and then half- hour later the roof in fact did collapse and about an hour after that, the second floor collapsed. and that's why they are so fearful that the building could come down on its own. they have a no go zone around the building right now between 22nd and 23rd. allen? >> the people who were evacuated are still out of there, mike? >> reporter: yeah, they are. they can't get to their apartments or stores. i talked to two or three people who were having lunch. they parked their cars like on
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22nd and one of the side streets. they went in for a chinese lunch and came back. there was fire going around. they have the fire blocks. they are still there four hours later they can't get their car out. >> going to be going on for a while longer. thank you, mike sugerman. chopper 5 is on the scene, has been all afternoon. the view from above shows the large scale of this fire. clouds of smoke billowing from the building for hours spreading over the city. kpix 5's ryan takeo reported from ground where toxic smoke is a concern. >> reporter: four people suffering from smoke inhalation including two firefighters. one of those people was treated at the scene. but three of them had to go to the hospital. toxic dangerous spoke we're talking about rising up right over there. and it's bad enough that it closed down this whole block right here, this whole block of businesses. you can see people -- show you
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some video right now lots of people covering their mouths so they didn't breathe in the smoke. the smoke was heading from the west to the east. now, some wanted to leave the area but they didn't have much of a choice. take a listen. >> it's not helping. i can't go nowhere. i'm parked on mission street. >> reporter: stuck there? >> yeah. >> reporter: right in front of the fire? >> right in front of the fire. >> it happened so quickly, we kept saying -- i thought somebody was upstairs just burning something and then realized all this black smoke just started coming down the street. >> reporter: cesar chavez elementary school which is three blocks away downwind, school was out when this fire started but after school, the students they had to stay in the auditorium with the windows closed. no playing on the playground today. back to you. >> ryan, the fire was -- took place at 2632 mission street. you just showed us a bunch of stores that are closed.
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where are you standing right now? >> reporter: we're over at cap and 22nd about a block away you can see right there, the yellow line right there police are keeping people behind that for the most part not letting people through here. some people have been able to go to the bank but for the most part, it's -- people cross the line police are escorting them back. >> mike was saying it's a no go zone right now. all right, ryan takeo, thank you. we talked about how crammed that store was full of stuff. here's a picture of what big house, inc., wholesale center looked like before today's fire. gives you an idea just how much merchandise was being sold and stored in that building. a quick recap now of the story. flames erupted at that commercial building in the mission district of san francisco about 1:00. it grew to a five-alarm fire. firefighters had to work from the outside of the building partly because it was packed full of all that stuff. we are told the smoke could be
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toxic. people being asked to stay away from the area. four people have been hurt including two firefighters. all taken to the hospital for smoke inhalation. new at 6:00 a dramatic showdown at the gates of a richmond railyard. protestors disrupted operations to the facility. it's the only one in california that's bringing in 100-car trains of full of fracked crude oil. it's a story kpix 5's christin ayers was the first to uncover. >> reporter: it was an extreme action a group of protestors chaining themselves by the neck with bicycle locks to the gates of the kinder-morgan rail terminal in richmond. >> we're here to stop kinder- morgan's illegal activity here in richmond. >> reporter: their goal, to block tanker trucks from carrying explosive crude oil through their communities. it's the same kind of shale oil from north dakota that has caused deadly explosions and derailments in canada and across the country. >> i will do everything i can
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to prevent that from happening. >> reporter: kpix 5 discovered back in march that trains 100 cars long are delivering the volatile loads to the railyard every month where it's transferred on trucks and driven to local refineries. but nobody knew the trains were coming into richmond because the operation never had to go through any kind of environmental review. >> they were grand a per -- granted a permit to bring in oil into this facility by the air quality management district without any public process. >> reporter: even richmond's mayor was kept in the dark. >> we hadn't been aware of it in richmond. i was aware of the greater issue but i'm very grateful to channel 5 for bringing this forward. >> reporter: she came by to show her support. >> this has been a big issue in richmond. i brought a resolution to the richmond city council stating that we need to do whatever we can to stop these trucks from rolling on our streets. >> reporter: police showed up in force but did not move to
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make any arrests. for three hours, the protestors blocked tanker trucks from leaving. then finally unchained themselves and left peacefully. because of our reporting, the environmental group earth justice has filed a lawsuit against kinder-morgan to try to force an environmental review. kinder-morgan would like to see that lawsuit dismissed. the first hearing in the case is tomorrow. in the newsroom, christin ayers, kpix 5. chevron has been hit with a fine for air quality violations at its richmond refinery, 27 different violations between 2011 and 2013. the bay area air quality management district says they varied from leaks to improper permits. the violations will cost chevron $270,000. the fine and violations are separate from the refinery fire in 2012. the first and probably only face-to-face debate in the race for california governor is less than an hour away. kpix 5's andria borba live in sacramento for the showdown
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between governor brown and the republican challenger neel kashkari. >> reporter: well, allen, this is likely the only debate that both candidates will and have agreed to the only date, the only forum. governor jerry brown is seeking an unprecedented fourth term in sacramento. his republican challenger neel kashkari facing an uphill battle. polls show him 16 points behind brown among all voters. and 32 points behind brown among moderates. kashkari's goal during tonight's debate will be to try to throw governor brown off his game. >> one, he has to prove he can stand toe to tow with jerry brown and understands the issues of the day that the state of california is facing but, second, he has to create a television moment. he has to create a confrontation that he, kashkari, can turn into a television commercial. in you are jerry brown, your only goal is to make sure kashkari doesn't get that moment. >> reporter: now, there will be
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plenty of chances for debate. they will focus on various issues. this isn't a large presidential style debate with an audience. it's in this small room inside the senator hotel across the street from the capital. it will just be brown, kashkari, a moderator, two reporters and a few cameras. that is it. very, very tight venue. that's what they agreed to at this point. the debate starts at 7:00. we will have a full wrap-up tonight on kpix 5 at 11:00. live in sacramento, andria borba, kpix 5. >> you can watch the debate streaming live on our website, kpix.com. a bay area senator wants more money from a proposed pg&e fine to go toward pipeline improvements. the public utilities commission is expected to fine pg&e nearly $1.5 billion for the san bruno explosion. but only $400 million goes toward pipeline improvements. the rest to go to other
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projects. senator jerry hill wants to be sure that doesn't happen. all nevada needs to do is approve an incentive package and the state will become the home of tesla's "giga factory." the $5 billion battery plant would go marino suburb. the package includes various tax breaks and enticements totaling $1.3 billion over 20 years. elon musk the ceo says the plant is important for his company and is unlike any other in the world. >> the "giga factory" is really vital for the future of tesla in order to produce this mass market of affordable electric car which is our goal from the beginning. it's not just going to be the biggest lithium ion battery factory in the world but bigger than the sum of all the lithium ion batteries factories in the world. >> despite the incentives and tax breaks, that plant could generate tense. billions of dollars in revenue for the stays -- tens of billions of dollars in revenue for the state. joan rivers died today.
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she was 81. known for her sharp tongue she was a trailblazer for women. she was a frequent guests on the tonight show with johnny carson. that relationship soured when she launched her own show in the 1980s. rivers frequently joked about death but spoke about it seriously with her daughter during an episode of their reality show. >> i have had a great life, an amazing life. if i died this morning, nobody would say, so young. >> rivers went into cardiac arrest during a procedure on her vocal cords. her funeral is set for this sunday in manhattan. hollywood paid tribute today. a colorful wreath was placed in ex-to her star on the walk of fame containing a note saying, joan, now you will have a new stage to perform on. joan rivers paved the way for female comediennes around the world including the bay area. kpix 5's don ford talked to one comedienne who calls rivers a hero. >> i just found out so i'm
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still processing it. >> reporter: margo gomez is a nationally known comedienne starting her career here in san francisco nearly 30 years ago appearing frequently at the famous purple onion. [ laughter ] >> reporter: margo calls rivers a true trailblazer for all women in comedy today. >> she opened the door for many of us. she mentored and nurtured many young comediennes -- not that i'm young -- [ laughter ] i might be the oldest living female comic. >> reporter: gomez saw a different side of rivers too. >> and i had the pleasure of talking to her a few times off stage. very gentle, the most caring person you would ever meet. >> reporter: in the castro, gomez says joan rivers will be enemiesed. >> she was certainly a hero to all of us in the gay community and a hero to women in comedy. >> reporter: in san francisco,
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don ford, kpix 5. >> gomez adds what made rivers special was she was constantly evolving and refining her act and coming up with new material. >> i remember her big fight with johnny carson and people thought it's over for her, it's over. once he becomes an enemy -- but it wasn't. not at all. quite a career. >> yeah. still ahead, some crimes caught on home video surveillance leading police right to the bad guys. well, now police want to map out whose cameras are rolling and where. >> and earthquakes usually hit fast but now scientists are learning about a slow motion tremor that's still going on.
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park bathroom. new at 6:00 san jose police have identified a suspect in the brutal beating of a man in a parked bathroom. -- park bathroom.
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police are looking for francisco olivo. cell phone video captured the attack in the fowler park restroom monday. olivo allegedly confronted the man about indecent exposure in the park and hit him several times. the victim has nonlife- threatening injuries to his face. police want to talk to any witnesses who saw what happened. if there's a crime these days, quite often it's captured on video and now police departments all over the bay area are asking people to register their home surveillance cameras so police know what's out there. mark sayre live in fremont with how the registration program is working. >> reporter: well, allen, fremont is one of the early adopters of this concept to have homeowners register their personal home surveillance systems and now cities from fremont to san mateo all the way to santa clara are asking for the same thing saying there's not much better evidence than surveillance video. in just the past three months, private security cameras all over the bay area have caught some of the most dramatic images of criminals in action. in may, a home security camera
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caught a man in san jose dousing a car with gas and then lighting it on fire right in the owner's driveway. last month, a security camera in sausalito caught a car being chased by police losing control hitting diners at a sidewalk cafe. >> it's helpful for us in the aftermath of a crime that's occurred. >> reporter: geneva is the spokesman for the fremont police department which rolled out its camera registration program over a year ago. since then, 285 people have registered their private camera systems. >> we can map them out and then we can try to determine if any of these cameras might help in our investigations. >> reporter: here in fremont in june a burglar uses a stick to move a home surveillance camera so it won't capture his face but that strategy didn't work. and in this security video, from san jose's willow glen neighborhood, a burglar uses a giant rock to breakthrough a sliding glass door. fremont police say the registration process started
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only after residents began equipping their homes and neighborhoods with cameras and sending tips to police. >> because if we do get them on video, then we are going to put it out to the world that we now have your photograph and that we are looking for you. >> reporter: now, since this program is completely voluntary and nobody has to participate, fremont police say they are not getting big brother type complaints for this because people that participate are doing so willingly. live in fremont, mark sayre, kpix 5. we are getting look at plans for a new project in san francisco. five design teams are competing. they are laying designs for a new open space that will be above the new tunnel roadway in the presidio. the 13-acre site will sit 35 feet in the air providing amazing views of the golden gate bridge and the bay. >> we're looking for a design that really maximizes the natural features of the place, you know, a design that really talks about views that really looks at those views and
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understands why those views are so important to the history of the presidio. >> the presidio trust is expected to officially pick a design by january. drought-tolerant we hope. people in sebastopol have to cut their water use by 20% and irrigation in early-morning hours. sebastopol leaders say conserving is the right thing to do given our circumstances. outside let's check the weather and i just can't say it enough. we need the rain. >> we do. >> there's none in the forecast. >> pretty good question, gentleman emailed between 5 and 6:00 news. why can't we seed the clouds? good question. the answer is, you need to have clouds that were going to rain and cloud seeding can make them rain more. here's problem. we have no clouds that are going to rain. that's our issue around here. it is a big time problem. it's been three years and i don't see a solution to it anytime in the immediate future. but i do see a gorgeous sunset
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about one hour from now. we'll have a beautiful sunset just enough cirrus cloud cover out there looking from dublin toward mount diablo in the san ramon valley. morgan hill 84 today. san jose hit 80. 79 fremont. oakland 74. san francisco was 69. it is friday eve so let's start thinking about that weekend. want to do a little art and wine festival? go to mountain view. castro street this weekend mostly sunny skies beautiful weather. upper 70s in mountain view. take the drought out of it. this weather has been spectacular for any outdoor activity and you can thank if you are in that category this area of high pressure sitting offshore give us just enough of an onshore flow. morning clouds cuts into the heat and prevents too much heat. watch what happens moving forward in time. hurricane norbert sitting off baja, california it is going to cause big time problems in areas as close as southern california, los angeles, san diego, likely getting rain from
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this. we will see some clouds from it but once again, it's a near miss for us. we will not see any rainfall over the next seven days. but we'll see a very nice friday. vallejo 82 tomorrow. fremont you will hit 80. mountain view 79. san rafael 83. morning fog afternoon sunshine in san francisco 68 degrees. saturday, the sunnier choice over the weekend because some of those tropical clouds not rain, clouds, will make it here on sunday and monday. next week, more of the same. we are dry. we are warm. we are not hot. we are patiently or impatiently waiting for the pattern to change. until then, go outside and get a tan. [ laughter ] >> might as well enjoy it. >> mother nature does not offer multiple choice. get out and enjoy. >> get the drought out. like that. hopefully soon. okay. thank you, paul. well, the oakland raiders have settled a lawsuit with their cheerleaders. some of the raiderettes had accused the team of violating labor laws and failing to pay them minimum wage. the raiders have agreed to pay more than a million dollars to
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settle the suit. each cheerleader could get about $6,000 once that deal is finalized. but that's not expected to happen until the end of the month. a surprise today from scientists looking at data from the napa quake. their findings on a super slow motion earthquake that isn't over yet. >> and bad news about the bugs. how we're back in 60 seconds. ' setting records this mosquito season. ,,,,
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geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. crumbling buildings litteri downtown, and millions of dollars in wine lost. now, .. scientists are during the napa quake there were fires, crumbling buildings, littering downtown and millions of dollars in wine loss. well, tonight scientists are unlocking new seismic secrets and among them a super slow motion quake of sorts is still happening but first, len ramirez with why napa bore the brunt of that 6.0 quake. >> reporter: the epicenter of the south napa quake was closer to american canyon and parts of vallejo than it was to downtown napa. but scientists say napa was just unlucky with how the fault slipped. >> it did rupture upward and
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northward toward napa. so that really put napa in the bull's eye. >> there was a small amount of rupture. >> reporter: geologists who have spent days combing the quake zone gathered at the u.s. geological survey in menlo park to share new insights into the 6.0 event. they say it was a perfect example of how rupture patterns can be random along a single fault. >> it ruptured away from napa and that would have spared napa, but it probably would have produced much more damage in vallejo. >> reporter: geologists say the earth moved about 18 inches in some places during the main jolt but for several days afterward, new fissures showed up suggesting that a sort of slow motion creeping earthquake is still happening. >> the places along the fault plain that didn't move so much are now catching up. >> reporter: another big takeaway is how effective retrofitting old brick buildings can be because of what didn't happen at joe's downtown brewery in napa. we to exactly how bad the shaking was here because the usgs installed an earthquake sensor in the building's basements a few years ago.
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>> that building underwent strong acceleration during the earthquake, strong shaking. and it sailed through just fine. >> reporter: it's still standing and open for business while other non-reinforced buildings are red-tagged and might have to be torn down. in menlo park, len ramirez, kpix 5. >> seismologists say more aftershocks are still possible in the coming days. the number of mosquitos with west nile virus is now at the highest level ever detected in california. data from the state health department shows a 34% increase this year. then there's an even bigger jump, 181 people infected with west nile virus. that's a 79% increase over last year. >> wow. you wouldn't think as dry as it is this year. be careful. all right. coming up in our next half-hour we're following the five-alarm fire that destroyed a san francisco building. crews are still out there now. we'll have a live update from the scene next. >> and only on 5, a film crew robbed at gunpoint as they were making a movie inside this
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francisco commercial buildi. choking smoke filling the a. and firefighters are still
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the scen a five-alarm fire destroys a san francisco commercial building, choking smoke filling the air and firefighters still on the scene hours later. welcome back, i'm allen martin. >> i'm veronica de la cruz. mike sugerman is live with a massive firefight and the impact it's having on the heart of the mission district. mike. >> reporter: veronica, you know, this is the mission district. it is teeming most of the time of the day and it's well right now it's blocked off with yellow tape because of this huge fire that started about 1:00 today with flames coming through the roof, smoke you could see all over the bay area. it was called big house. it was filled with souvenirs and t-shirts, inexpensive foreign-made stuff that just blew up with the fire and there was five alarms which is the highest amount of alarms the san francisco fire department has, at least 130 firefighters
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were here fighting the fire, choking smoke, four people taken to the hospital, smoke inhalation. the, uhm, block on the west side where the fire was will be closed all night. they are going to come in and demolish the building because they are afraid it could fall down on its own. the eastern part of the sidewalk should open soon. and so there will be no shopping at least on five or six blocks of mission on the west side. and a lot of the residents and people visiting have been inconvenienced, too. >> i got here, i see my place is fine. i can see it from here. but it's in the restrict area that i can't get into. >> reporter: you just parked for lunch and now you're stuck here for hours? >> yes. [ laughter ] >> reporter: would you have to be anywhere. yeah, i have to go somewhere, san jose. >> reporter: you thought you would just go to san jose right after lunch? >> yes. so right now i asked the officer if can get my room. there's room to get out but
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they won't let me. >> reporter: muni has been rerouted, as well. the mission bus will be going on south van ness for at least another -- well, 24 hours probably. as we come back, you can see they just opened the east sidewalk of mission street and maybe just maybe our friends can get back into their apartments and our friend can go down to san jose finally after his chinese lunch at 1:00 today. veronica? >> mike, as you're speaking with us, they are putting up some police tape. can you give us a sense of where you're standing and where the no go zone is right now? >> reporter: i am between 21st and 22nd and the fire was between 22nd and 23rd. they are just putting up the tape again. right now you can't drive from 21st down to 25th on mission
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street. and again, the western side of the street will be closed at least through tomorrow and the site i'm standing on, i'm going to have to get out of here in about an hour or so. they are going to open it up when it's safe to do so later tonight. >> the fire at 2632 mission street. already, mike sugerman, thank you. only on 5, horror on the movie set. two different film crews robbed at gunpoint in broad daylight in recent weeks. both happened in west oakland. one was recorded on a microphone. >> what? [ [ inaudible ] ] >> three guys with two guns stormed into a house as an lgbt film crew was filming a scene, the robbers taking laptops, cell phones, wallets, camera gear. just about everything. but one wireless microphone hidden under someone's shirt was recording and you can hear the robbers get aggressive
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toward a pregnant woman. [ cursing and yelling ] >> i was just concerned about them not kicking her, you know, she is pregnant. >> i was staring down the barrel of an semi-automatic handgun. here you go, man, just take the bag. >> he know one was hurt but they lost -- no one was hurt but they lost about $30,000 in equipment. two days later a film crew was robbed at gunpoint a few miles away. police don't no if it's the same rob -- police don't know if it's the same robber. a long-time school feud may have led to the stabbing death of rashawn williams, the 14- year-old killed outside a market in san francisco on tuesday. his aunt said rashawn had a history of problems with the 14- year-old suspect. both boys had been classmates since kindergarten. police are not releasing the suspect's name because of his age. the memorial continues to grow outside the mission district store where rashawn was killed. the california attorney general is pushing for tougher truancy laws.
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kamala harris visited an elementary school in oakland today. she is trying to bring attention to the state's truancy crisis. an average of one million elementary students are absent each year. harris says california is one of four states that doesn't track those truancies. >> one of the bills that's being proposed and we hope the governor will sign says let's track it on a statewide level so we can know when our children are in school and when they're not and then we can engage when they're not and create an initiative. >> harris has sponsored legislation to help local school districts intervene when children are chronically absent. the justice department is putting the ferguson police department under its microscope. >> our investigation will assess the police department's use of force including deadly force. it will analyze stops, searches and arrests. and it will examine the treatment of individuals detained at ferguson's city jail. in addition to other potentially discriminatory
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policing techniques and tactics that have been brought it light. >> ferguson, missouri has been in the national spotlight since a teen was shot by a police officer. the shooting touched off days of rioting in the suburb of st. louis. some of those protests turned violence prompting the governor to call in the state police and the national guard. it's being called the most important gathering of nato leaders in the history of the alliance. western diplomats are meeting in wales for the two-day summit. they are going to talk about isis and ukraine. the u.s. is promising an immediate escalation in sanctions if russia doesn't back off from eastern ukraine. >> president obama is very committed to moving on the next track of sanctions. >> russian troops and russian tanks are allegedly attack the ukranian forces and while talking about peace, russia has
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not made one single step to make peace possible. >> congress is turning up the heat on the white house to expand air strikes across the border from iraq into syria now rather than later. still ahead, debt collectors getting more persistent. coming up in consumerwatch who they are going after now and why they are not giving up. ,, ,,,,,,
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and a new report finds the government is using them, t. people who are we have all heard about aggressive debt collectors and the government is using them too to go after people late paying student loans. kpix 5 consumerwatch reporter julie watts telling us borrowers paying a hefty price. >> reporter: the new report confirms what people know, the government is sending debt collectors to go after student loans and sometimes crossing the line. the collectors get paid how much they collect with the student loans in default and
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found the agencies aren't informing borrowers of their payment options and the east bay community law center says there's another problem. >> people think their debt has been bought by a private company and people don't realize it's still a federal student loan debt not a private debt somehow. >> she says this can create confusion about the terms of the loan and how to pay it o the report calls the department of education to do more to crackdown on unscrupulous debt collectors who legally cannot harass you, threaten you, lie to you or call you before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m. unless you agree. you can also tell a debt collector not to contact you again and they are required by law to comply. but remember, you still owe that debt. and the consumerwatch, julie watts, kpix 5. >> just say don't call me ever again. that simple. >> like an old boyfriend. [ laughter ] still ahead, it is the usual job to lay eggs but what these hundreds of hens got to do instead for the first time
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today. >> beautiful weather on the stanford campus right now big football game usc visiting palo alto on saturday. sunshine for a thursday evening. what's in store for your weekend? here's a hint. both weekend days will not be the same. i'll have details coming up. >> and i'm dennis o'donnell. coming up, it looks like tony romo has seen film with the 49ers and going to dallas will be a homecoming for one 49ers. >> i think my family is more excited than i am. >> and how excited are the new york jets facing a rookie quarterback? >> i'm glad we're facing this kid week one instead of week 15. >> we're counting down to kickoff coming up. ,,,,,,,,
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of sorts. john ramos takes us to the h hem... and hoping the lives of hundreds of chickens spared in one mass pardon. >> it is a pardon. john ramos takes us to the ranch that is saving them and hoping that you'll be the next to help them out. >> reporter: at the end of a lonely dirt road in vacaville is the animal place ranch. but this is not the end of the road for the 1500 chickens that
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arrived here today. >> nothing but a cage. >> reporter: but all that is about to change because this is liberation day. [ cluck cluck ] >> reporter: these mature hens came from a factory egg farm where they would have been killed if animal place hadn't taken them. they spent their entire lives jammed together in wire cages. this is the first time any of them have been able to flap their wings or even walk on solid ground. >> it's just so powerfully positive, but it's just like completely refreshes me and i'm letting it go again. >> reporter: the volunteers at this rescue don't see these as just chickens. they say these are living feeling creatures that shouldn't live a life of torture just because most humans consider them to be food. >> what people don't know about chickens is they have a whole
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range of personalities. and they are actually very bright. >> reporter: that he is why these ladies are being put up for adoption to live out their lives in a good home. while it may seem insignificant to save 1500 chickens out of the billions raised each year -- >> but, you know, it matters to this one, uhm, it matters to that one. and that one. so toss to meteorologist paul deanno (((weather))) (((weather))) (((weather))) the state's first - and onl- gubernatorial debate this yr is
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set to start in about 10 minutes. governor jerry brown versusl kashkari. we'll have the details for u on bay area nightbeat.. at 0 on the c-w. and we'll be right back. the raiders begin their sean sunday against the jets..th
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made the playoffs since 200 haven't won in the eastern time sin since 2009, and rookie david carr is the team's 18th stag quarterback since their last super bowl season, pressure? what pressure? ... carr was a freshman in college the last time the raiders won on the east coa. and he'll have his hands full... rook quarterbacks are just 1-7 against the jets under head coach rex ryan when michael crabtree was pushing hot dogs for bill
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parcell's cowboys, lemichael james was being raised by his grandman texarkana...both players goe this sunday as the 49ers op the season in dallas...crab had to spring for 70 ticket frank gore is entering his h season, which in running ba years, means the clock is ticking...
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gore will be a free agent ae end of the season, but runng backs coach tom rathman says father time hasn't been kno on gore's door. you can see more of my interview with tom rathman a whole lot more tomorrow nigt
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seven o'clock on countdown kickoff... our season previ show for both the forty nins and raiders it cost $1.3 billion dollar build levi's stadium...but that's not the only sticker shock.. the forty niners are secondy to the patriots for the most expensive tickets in the n- l... a forty percent increan the average cost compared to last year at candlestick... it's also estimated that a family of will spend over six hundred dollars to go to a game, whh is the highest in the n-f- l..but hey,you get a hot dod a beer..oh boy u-s open... jenna bush in t house for the men's quarterfinals. marin chill-ich missed last year's u-s open due to a dog suspension... he's bounced k this year with a trip to the semifinals after beating tos ber-deek in straight sets
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wahoo may be the fastest fi, but not fast enough the rod of kim, who pulled in a fifty pound ten miles from orange count it is believed to be the fit catch of a wahoo on the u-se of the mexican border thanks. for news throughout the eve, the latest is always on kpix dot-com. join us for nightbeat at 10n the c-w. and you can see ♪
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♪ [ barks ] whoo! mmm! ♪ ♪ oh, yeah [ whistling ] [ male announcer ] discover your new orleans. start exploring at followyournola.com. [ woman ] and i love new orleans!
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announcer: it's time to play "family feud!" give it up for steve harvey! [theme music playing] [cheering and applause] steve: how are y'all? how's everybody doing today? i appreciate you, now. thank you very much, folks. all right, everybody, look. welcome to "family feud." i'm your man steve harvey. and we've got a good one for you today, folks. we've got a family returning for the fourth day. from atlanta, georgia, it's the stewart family! [cheering and applause] and from villa rica, georgia, it's the edenfield family! [cheering and applause] everybody's here trying to win theirself a lot of cash and the possibility of driving out of here in a brand-new stylish ford fusion. good luck to both of you. let's play "feud." give me karen. give me gia. [theme music playing]
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top 7 answers on the board. name something men do in public that women wouldn't be caught dead doing. karen. >> picking their nose. steve: picking their nose. [ding] gia. >> adjusting themselves. steve: adjusting themselves. [cheering and applause] [ding] [cheering and applause] >> we're gonna play. steve: they're gonna play. [cheering and applause] >> yeah! steve: sergeant alonzo, how are you feeling today? >> just fine. just fine. steve: good. good. let's go, sir. name something men do in public that women wouldn't be caught dead doing. >> passing gas. steve: passing gas. [cheering and applause] [ding] [laughter] >> [indistinct]

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